Kant and History: ELCS0038 Aspects of European Thought
Kant and History: ELCS0038 Aspects of European Thought
Kant and History: ELCS0038 Aspects of European Thought
‘But only the man who is himself enlightened, who is not afraid of shadows,
and who commands at the same time a well disciplined and numerous army
as guarantor of public peace--only he can say what [the sovereign of] a free
state cannot dare to say: “Argue as much as you like, and about what you
like, but obey!”’
Winckelmann and Schiller
A Comparative Historiography
Johann Joachim Winckelmann
• Art historian and archaeologist
• Thoughts on the Imitation of Greek Works
in Painting and the Art of Sculpture (1755)
• Three stages of human history:
• ancient: the past; harmonious, uncritical
relationship with nature
• modern: the present; alienation from nature
• future: critical reunion with nature
Friedrich Schiller
• Historian and playwright
• ‘What is universal history and why does one
study it?’ (1789)
• ‘On Grace and Dignity’ (1793)
• tendency: physical urges defined by the body
• duty: ethical responsibility defined by societal rules
• grace: when duty is able to control tendency
• beauty: the harmonious representation of this
process
• Cf. Lessing, Laocoon: An Essay on the Limits of
Painting and Poetry (1767)
Some reflections on Kant’s
historiography
Kant, ‘Idea of a Universal History for a
Cosmopolitan Purpose’ (1784)
Seminar questions:
• What is Kant’s concept of history? What role does it play within his philosophy?
• Does the Kant’s transcendental idealism shape history or the other way around?
• What appears to move history forwards, and what remains constant and
timeless?
• Which universals does Kant rely on? Which secular aspects? Do they conflict?
• What role does the critic play?
Essay question:
• ‘Kant’s philosophy of history is more concerned with the future than with the
past.’ Discuss with reference to ‘Idea of a Universal History’.